If I can get away with it being under $4000, I consider myself fortunate. But my attitude is this: To go cheap is expensive; to go expensive isn't that much more expensive. I realize most people don't buy, oh I don't know, 12 pounds of filet mignons, five bottles of absinthe, 11 cases of beer (split between two of us), bring enough food to have a large French toast breakfast Monday morning for 40 of your closest friends, rent a $3000 RV, and just relish in the lap of luxury. And let's face it, $4000 isn't much money at all when you think about it. Burning Man however, is priceless.

We spent about 8500 in total for 3 of us round trip including tickets and all expenses.

Edit : That was round trip driving from New York.

Savannah: I don't know what it is, but no thread here escapes alive. You'll get 1 or 2 real answers at minimum, occasionally 10 or 12, and then we flog it until it's unrecognizable and you can't get your deposit back.

I don't really keep track. My biggest expenses the last 2 years were 3 tickets (each year but kids can buy their own this year), box rental truck, extra booze and shot glasses (2011). 2010 was more expensive because I didn't have a lot of camping stuff to begin with and the hexayurt panels were bought that year too. So most camping stuff is no longer an expense. Fuck if I know...

My BM trips have ended up being some of the cheapest trips I've taken over the years, work or play, even excluding the duration of the trip, enjoyment, and overall benefit. I'm completely disillusioned with going to places like Europe, where everything has rip-off prices compared to the US, and all the towns look exactly the same. Going to Vegas has lost its charm--the glitz of BM, but the opposite side of the spectrum with respect to comodification and any sense of affection for the place/event. Even visiting some place like California for a day or two ends up costing quite a bit for little return.

Every penny spent on BM feels like a penny earned.

"The essence of tyranny is not iron law. It is capricious law." -- Christopher Hitchens

Drawingablank wrote:We spent about 8500 in total for 3 of us round trip including tickets and all expenses.

Edit : That was round trip driving from New York.

Yikes! There are oodles of ways to cut that number in half. Why do you drive instead of flying and shipping your supplies? That drive can be a fun thing once or twice, to see the country, but 2 weeks in a car, can be grueling. The cost of gas, hotels, food, car repairs and other expenses, makes a 6 hour flight very appealing. Rent a large SUV once you land and pick up the stuff that you shipped ahead to your hotel. You might consider renting a storage unit in Reno and have your stuff waiting for the next year. Shop hotel prices, use car rental discount coupons, use credit card miles for flights, and make long lists of supplies you will need prior to leaving home.

A good part of my $1500 spent, is on my SUV rental, hotel and gas. You could probably get the cost of your trip down under $3000 for the three of you if you plan wisely--and NOT spend 2 weeks driving as an added bonus.

Drawingablank wrote:We spent about 8500 in total for 3 of us round trip including tickets and all expenses.

Edit : That was round trip driving from New York.

Yikes! There are oodles of ways to cut that number in half. Why do you drive instead of flying and shipping your supplies? That drive can be a fun thing once or twice, to see the country, but 2 weeks in a car, can be grueling. The cost of gas, hotels, food, car repairs and other expenses, makes a 6 hour flight very appealing. Rent a large SUV once you land and pick up the stuff that you shipped ahead to your hotel. You might consider renting a storage unit in Reno and have your stuff waiting for the next year. Shop hotel prices, use car rental discount coupons, use credit card miles for flights, and make long lists of supplies you will need prior to leaving home.

A good part of my $1500 spent, is on my SUV rental, hotel and gas. You could probably get the cost of your trip down under $3000 for the three of you if you plan wisely--and NOT spend 2 weeks driving as an added bonus.

Well it being our first year I was pretty paranoid about gettting to Nevada and some of the stuff I shipped not arriving so we drove. My wife was pretty well set on an RV too which really upped the cost and the fuel cost once we picked it up in Salt Lake City.

The RV turned out to be a complete waste for us. Current plans for 2012 are to have a much bigger camp so as of now we will be driving out in a box truck, then storing the infrastructure in a storage unit so we can fly home and to / from future burns. I haven't priced storage places yet, but it has to be way less than all that fuel and time off work.

Savannah: I don't know what it is, but no thread here escapes alive. You'll get 1 or 2 real answers at minimum, occasionally 10 or 12, and then we flog it until it's unrecognizable and you can't get your deposit back.

I seem to recall in one of the editions of JRS, where they sent out a poll to see how many people would be interested in long term storage, near BRC. Not sure if anything came from that, but I bet a lot of burners here, as I'm sure you already know, would have additional insight on the matter.

I spent a lot my first year, but some of that was one time expenditure, which I hope to eventually spread out over future burns. Thing is, even as I streamline my burn, I get more grandiose ideas of cool stuff I want to build and bring.. $ching-ching-ching

$160 Ticket ( I am trying for a scholarship)$250 Gas riding with someone$100 Food and Water$60 Camp Fee$100 In booze ( going to try to do this)$100 In costumes and glow lightingGifts are being hand made out of things I have on the acreage.

So im looking at $670 to $770ish.

maladroit- Burning Man is like a second job, except you pay to work there.Burning Man is just the pre party for exodus! - fellow burner during exodus

$160 Ticket ( I am trying for a scholarship)$250 Gas riding with someone$100 Food and Water$60 Camp Fee$100 In booze ( going to try to do this)$100 In costumes and glow lightingGifts are being hand made out of things I have on the acreage.

So im looking at $670 to $770ish.

Okay, you have a tent, shade, sleeping bag, and a cooler? If you already camp, then I assume yes. Not items I would trust to a camp unless I knew them to be reliable and such things were specified.What about health and safety items? Sunblock, saline tears, nasal rinse, foot cream, first aid kit, earplugs,baby wipes if the shower is out of commission or you don't have access to it 24/7, etc.? Don't skimp on those items! Don't assume your camp will have all you need as far as those things go. Probably, but you don't want to find out on the playa. You probably have most of those things, but do plan for them. Goggles, dust mask, and good footwear will eat up a portion of your costume budget. A priority.

TG, you also might want to put a few bucks aside for a room either coming or going back home. Burners who travel aways always mention how nice it is when they get to a town and can sleep in a real bed and have a real shower before hitting the road again....

trilobyte wrote:Drawingablank, you can also check with other NY burners about getting in on the shipping container(s). Could be a worthwhile option for getting some of the gear out there.

Also, DAB.. Have you thought about doing the fly-in and box truck camping trick? You could pull the whole thing off for about $2500-$3000 for 3 people including everything and no cross country driving required. I would get the huge 24' truck and pimp that thing. For real..

Yep the 24 footer is really nice and big. I had a 24 footer in 2010 and then 12 footer in 2011. The 12 footer was packed full and I have a hexayurt to camp in. But the 24 was so mush nicer and we spent the night in it the first night we were there as we were to tired to set up camp...

trilobyte wrote:Drawingablank, you can also check with other NY burners about getting in on the shipping container(s). Could be a worthwhile option for getting some of the gear out there.

Also, DAB.. Have you thought about doing the fly-in and box truck camping trick? You could pull the whole thing off for about $2500-$3000 for 3 people including everything and no cross country driving required. I would get the huge 24' truck and pimp that thing. For real..

I'm on the NY list and I've considered the container option, it just seems like more hassle than it's worth - especially having to hump everything to our camp once it's on the playa.

Well the box truck is figured in to the plans but the current plan atm is to bring a much larger camp - huge shade structure(s), sofas, stove, barbecue, bunch of coolers, tables, chairs, sound system, big art, bikes, etc... More than can be economically shipped. We will also have more than 3 people and current plans are for several of us to drive the truckload out while the others fly and meet in Reno. Once the bulk of it is out there in storage, it will be easy enough to fly to / from future burns.

Of course all of that may come to naught, and if those plans fall through I'll probably be flying out solo and doing the minimalist thing in all likelyhood. Talk is cheap and we will see what happens when it comes time for camp members to pony up cash for tickets and the camp expeses so I'm keeping my plans flexible until January.

Savannah: I don't know what it is, but no thread here escapes alive. You'll get 1 or 2 real answers at minimum, occasionally 10 or 12, and then we flog it until it's unrecognizable and you can't get your deposit back.

AntiM wrote:Okay, you have a tent, shade, sleeping bag, and a cooler? If you already camp, then I assume yes. Not items I would trust to a camp unless I knew them to be reliable and such things were specified.What about health and safety items? Sunblock, saline tears, nasal rinse, foot cream, first aid kit, earplugs,baby wipes if the shower is out of commission or you don't have access to it 24/7, etc.? Don't skimp on those items! Don't assume your camp will have all you need as far as those things go. Probably, but you don't want to find out on the playa. You probably have most of those things, but do plan for them. Goggles, dust mask, and good footwear will eat up a portion of your costume budget. A priority.

Yep- Tent,shade,bags, cooler. Brother is a eagle scout and has done WAY to much backpacking in crazy places.Babywipes I still need to get ( I'm requesting them at Christmas haha!)Still need to find a nice pair of goggles and I Have a dust mask and footwear I just have a few bits and pieces I need to get. I plan on just throwing them on the Christmas list. Usally it is always makeup and gift cards for more makeup. I am making it a point of no makeup this year as I have way to much.

I have types up a whole list of everything I have to bring. I stared everything I still need to pick up. Surprisingly not to much.

maladroit- Burning Man is like a second job, except you pay to work there.Burning Man is just the pre party for exodus! - fellow burner during exodus

motskyroonmatick wrote:If I could throw any amount of discipline down on my ass I could do the burn for $1,000. Fat chance of that though.

LOL I'm sure there are many others besides myself that can relate!

I think I used to run $1,000 - $1,200, but while I've been unemployed the last few years I've managed to do a huge chunk of that in trade (jewelry, photo work...) so my actual cash outlay is a lot less; probably less than $300, mostly food, water, booze, bike maintenance and misc.

You can do Burning Man cheaply, but it certainly helps to have a network to draw on to help- I never could have managed on my own.

We still fiddle with camp infrastructure from year to year. The Trailblazer was a concession to my misplaced L-5, and we upgraded the trailer last year. Annual supplies aren't much, as I scrounge sales all year, and much of the food goes on the truck with Larry the rest of the year. Wayward art runs to quite a bit, although I've yet to itemize. Under $1K, but still a chunk of change. Less these days as I've built up a stock of paints, raw materials and canvas. Booze runs a hundred or more, but mostly it is gifted out to bars. Gas is a three to four hundred, although per capita, it isn't bad.